An intriguing blog entitled Ten Thousand Things from Kyoto carries an article suggesting that a chance encounter in Kyoto had world-changing repercussions.
The meeting concerned Gary Snyder and Daniel Ellsberg, whose name is famous for the Pentagon Papers that in 1971 exposed US military decision-making in the Vietnam War and which played a decisive role in helping to end the fighting.
The piece runs as follows:
Daniel Ellsberg tells the story of meeting activist, poet, and Zen practitioner Gary Snyder by chance at a bar near the Zen monastery of Ryoanji in Kyoto, Japan, in 1960. Ellsberg was living in Tokyo, working on nuclear weapons policy for the Office of Naval Research, through the Rand Corporation. Snyder was then midway through a nearly ten-year period of Zen practice, staying at or near Zen monasteries for the bulk of that time.
Ellsberg had gone to see the Zen garden at Ryoanji because he had read about it in Jack Kerouac’s The Dharma Bums in which Snyder was the lightly fictionalized major figure.
The impact and memory of Ellsberg’s conversations with Snyder at the bar and the next day at Snyder’s cottage, Ellsberg later reported, played a significant role in his later decision, some nine years later, to divulge the Pentagon Papers, the secret history of the planning of the Vietnam War. Ellsberg’s action was a major contribution to the turn against the war in public opinion and political discussions in the United States.
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